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1.
Evol Lett ; 7(6): 422-435, 2023 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38045718

RESUMO

The dynamics and processes underlying the codiversification of plant-pollinator interactions are of great interest to researchers of biodiversity and evolution. Cospeciation is generally considered a key process driving the diversity of figs and their pollinating wasps. Groups of closely related figs pollinated by separate wasps occur frequently and represent excellent opportunities to study ongoing diversification in this textbook mutualism. We study two closely related sympatric dioecious figs (Ficus heterostyla and Ficus squamosa) in Xishuangbanna, southwest China, and aim to document what is likely to be the final stages of speciation between these species using a combination of trait data and experimental manipulation. Volatile profiles at the receptive phase, crucial for attracting pollinators, were analyzed. In total, 37 and 29 volatile compounds were identified from receptive F. heterostyla and F. squamosa figs, respectively. Despite significant interspecific dissimilarity, 25 compounds were shared. Ovipositor lengths lie well within range required for access to heterospecific ovules, facilitating hybridization. Cross introduction of wasps into figs was conducted and hybrid seeds were generated for all donor/recipient combinations. F. heterostyla wasps produce adult offspring in F. squamosa figs. While F. squamosa wasps induce gall development in F. heterostyla figs and their offspring fail to mature in synchrony with their novel host. We record limited geographic barriers, minimal volatile dissimilarity, compatible morphology, complementary reproductive phenologies, and the production of hybrid seeds and wasp offspring. These findings suggest ongoing wasp specialization and reproductive isolation, potentially applicable to other related fig species.

2.
Mitochondrial DNA B Resour ; 7(1): 236-238, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35087939

RESUMO

The Ficus squamosa and Ficus heterostyla share an undescribed pollinating fig wasp Ceratosolen sp. in Xishuangbanna region, which constitutes the most excellent model to study the role of convergent evolution and hybridization in the species-specific fig-wasp mutualism. The plastomes were 160,350 bp for Ficus squamosa and 160,300 bp for F. heterostyla, both in length with the typical quadripartite structure. In the two genomes, the LSC region was 88,615 bp (F. squamosa) and 88,535 bp (F. heterostyla), the SSC region was 20,071 bp (F. squamosa) and 20,101 bp (F. heterostyla), and the IR regions of both figs were 25,832 bp. They contained 113 unique genes, including a set of 78 protein-coding genes, 30 transfer RNA (tRNA) genes, four ribosomal RNA (rRNA) genes, and one pseudogene (infA). Phylogenetic analysis based on the complete chloroplast (cp) genomes within the Ficus genus suggests that they are closely related sister species.

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